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Sustainability Challenges for Organic Chemistry: ORGN Perspective Christopher J. Welch* 2014 Chair of the ACS Division of Organic Chemistry (ORGN), Process & Analytical Chemistry, Merck Research Laboratories, Rahway, New Jersey 07065, United States *E-mail:
[email protected] The issue of sustainability is becoming increasingly important in science, as researchers strive to create systems and technologies that can provide ongoing benefit to earth’s population. The role that the various technical divisions of the American Chemical Society can play in this important enterprise was a focus for a ‘Sustain Mix’ event held during the ACS National Meeting in San Francisco, in August 2014. As the 2014 chair of the ACS Division of Organic Chemistry (ORGN), I participated in this event, and here summarize some thoughts and trends relating to the global sustainability challenge and how an organization such as the ACS Division of Organic Chemistry can play a useful role in helping to build a sustainable future.
Introduction I am glad to have the opportunity to represent the ACS Division of Organic Chemistry (ORGN) in this important volume on the topic of sustainability and chemistry. What I present here roughly follows the talk on this subject that I delivered at the ACS National Meeting in San Francisco, in August 2014. As the 2014 chair of ORGN I felt obligated to participate in the SustainMix event, despite my lack of expertise on this subject. The Organic Division does have a long history of promoting green chemistry, although few within our leadership had, at the time of the San Francisco meeting, devoted much thought to the © 2015 American Chemical Society Levy and Middlecamp; Teaching and Learning about Sustainability ACS Symposium Series; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 2015.
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long term sustainability of the organic chemistry enterprise. Organic chemists, particularly those of the process chemistry persuasion, do enjoy the challenge of designing chemical syntheses to meet specific design constraints, and while these constraints have historically been concerned with the production of high quality products meeting required performance standards with minimal starting material and processing costs, the rapid rise of green chemistry and engineering in recent years suggests that organic chemists may be up to the challenge of optimizing for sustainability as well. These reflections are compiled from my own personal views and from valuable discussions with other organic chemists on how organizations like the ACS Division of Organic Chemistry can play a useful role in helping to build a sustainable future. I am particularly grateful to Ingrid Mergelsberg, Rob Maleczka, Mike Doyle, Oliver Reiser and David Constable.
Is Sustainability at Odds with 3.5 Billion Years of Evolution? The sustainability challenge for humans on earth in the 21st century is daunting. We can summarize by saying that we have too many people, not enough resources and too much degradation. Before pondering potential fixes, it is useful to reflect on some fundamental truths about life as we know it. In San Francisco, with exceptional vineyards and wineries close at hand, I likened our situation on Earth to winemaking, where grape juice (containing the key resource, sugar) is placed into a vessel, then inoculated with a living colony of yeast organisms. The yeast eat the sugars, grow and multiply until either the food runs out or the growing colony generates so much toxic waste (ethanol) as a byproduct of their growth that the system crashes and the organisms within the vessel die. If we take pity on the dying yeast colony, coming to the rescue to remove ethanol or provide more sugars, the yeast just do it all over again, selfishly increasing until they once again crash the system. It could be argued that this kind of behavior is a core attribute of all life on earth, which if given the chance, will multiply unchecked to take advantage of available resources. Luckily, unlike the yeast trapped within a sealed vat, the earth is not an entirely closed system, receiving an ongoing supply of sunlight that provides the foundation for (almost) all life on earth. Nevertheless, the distribution of this sun-derived food among the web of life on earth is dynamic and constantly changing, complete with runaway resource depletion and system crashes akin to the winemaking example. We humans would like to believe that we are more intelligent than the yeast, being able to foresee and take steps to avert an impending system crash. However, the reality is quite stark. The world’s population continues to balloon well past a safe ‘carrying capacity’, continued growth is called for by economists and planners, with the plateauing or declining population growth of countries such as Japan being pointed to as a harbinger of impending economic disaster (1). We are far away from being able to create and enact a plan that would transform a world spiraling out of control in terms of population growth and resource depletion into one that could be sustainably managed. 68 Levy and Middlecamp; Teaching and Learning about Sustainability ACS Symposium Series; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 2015.
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Stay and Fix vs. Move on to Fresh Pastures The family histories of many Americans are filled with stories of immigrant ancestors escaping closed systems with dwindling resources, relocating in a new land of opportunity where hard work and an abundance of unexploited resources allowed them to thrive and multiply. But, after a few years or a few generations they often moved on because of increasing competition and decreasing resources. From Massachusets to New Jersey to Kentucky to Ohio to Indiana to Illinois to Nebraska to California, continually seeking new horizons and fresh pastures. This pioneer spirit and appreciation for the open road is an integral part of not just American culture, but a common theme among many peoples. Using a chemistry analogy, we could say that humans love the initial rate portion of the reaction curve, where every appropriate collision of starting materials, A and B, leads to the formation of product, C. We love the simplicity of this initial burst regime, but as time goes on the reverse reaction begins to limit progress, ultimately leading to that particularly dissatisfying situation where for every C that is formed, one is consumed and destroyed… gridlock… stasis… equilibrium. We would much rather be like Robinson Crusoe coming ashore on an uninhabited island filled with untapped resources. Recent archeological investigations have been shedding light on early inhabitants of the Americas, whose immediate forebears crossed the Bering land bridge to encounter a world untouched by humans. Several weeks before our meeting in San Francisco, the scientific press was filled with reports of the discovery of a Clovis culture site in northern Mexico containing the butchered skeletons of two gomphotheres, a mammoth relative, along with stone tools (2). Two things are significant about this finding: First, the site dates to 13,400 years ago, very soon after humans came to the Americas. Second, gomphotheres had been thought to be extinct prior to the arrival of humans in the Americas, clearly a hypothesis now in need of revision. Megafauna extinctions have often occurred when humans come into contact with isolated environments (3). For example, eleven species of flightless moas became extinct within a hundred years of the arrival of humans in New Zealand about eight hundred years ago (4). Viewed from our current perspective, these extinctions are difficult to understand; why would people kill the last moa rather than fighting to preserve them as a sustainable resource? But, viewed from the perspective of a participant at a moa or gomphothere barbeque, the dilemma becomes more easily understood – with local and short term considerations outweighing global and long term impacts.
How To Avoid the Tragedy of the Commons? This kind of situation where optimization of individual interests leads to degradation of shared resources is often referred to as the “tragedy of the commons” from a 1968 Science article by Garrett Hardin (5). The key features can be illustrated in a scenario where a village shares a communal pasture, and one villager gets the idea to graze a cow on the pasture. The cow grows fat, the owner profits, and decides to put a few more cattle onto the pasture. Inspired by 69 Levy and Middlecamp; Teaching and Learning about Sustainability ACS Symposium Series; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 2015.
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his success, neighbors add their cattle as well. In time, the cattle become crowded, growing more slowly, and the pasture begins to show signs of degradation. While less profitable than before, those raising cattle are still making profits, so the practice continues. But as all could foresee but none could prevent, an overabundance of cattle on the pasture ultimately leads to complete degradation and system collapse. History is replete with examples of how accumulation of seemingly innocent actions by individuals ultimately spells disaster for a shared resource. Anthropogenic climate change, overfishing of the world’s oceans and the imminent extinction of rhinos, elephants, tigers, gorillas and saiga to meet demands for trophies and folk cures are just a few grim examples of the tragedies we are currently facing (6). For the example of the cows and the village green, a relatively straightforward solution may be possible. A village council can shift the equilibrium to achieve a ‘sustainable steady state’ by introducing variable grazing fees, applying an economic pressure that over time would reduce the number of cattle and limit environmental degradation. Alternatively, a ‘sustainable cycle’ can be achieved if the council prohibits all grazing when pasture degradation reaches a certain critical level, mandating a fallow period to regenerate the degraded resource before grazing resumes. While both of these strategies could, in principle, lead to a sustainable outcome, the problem of how the council decides on a course of action, and how they arrange to enforce their decision now and into the future can be quite complex, even at the level of a small village. The situation becomes considerably more complex when the resource in question is shared between several towns or several states or several nations, or when it is shared by the entire globe. Early pioneers escaped such degraded environments by moving to unspoiled locations and fresh pastures, but this strategy is becoming increasingly non-viable as ever more of the earth’s surface and resources become developed. While colonization of the arctic, ocean seamounts or space may be possible, it is increasingly clear that our challenge today is to devise sustainable systems and ways of operating that will allow us to avoid ‘tragedy of the commons’ outcomes.
Can’t We All Just Get Along? A natural response when faced with such problems is to ask “why doesn’t everybody just do the right thing? Do we really need to create laws and policing mechanisms to keep people from doing the wrong thing?” Unfortunately, the strategy of expecting people to do the right thing suffers from several important flaws: •
Awareness: Sometimes the right thing is just not obvious. The effects that cumulatively lead to resource degradation can, in some cases, be small and subtle, with participants in the tragedy not even realizing that what they are doing has a negative consequence. 70 Levy and Middlecamp; Teaching and Learning about Sustainability ACS Symposium Series; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 2015.
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Difference of Opinion: Sometimes different people see the issue in different ways. The patient buying rhinoceros horn powder in China sees the impact of their actions differently than the conservation officer in Botswana or the environmentalist in California, and the ‘climate change denier’ sees the link between anthropogenic carbon dioxide and climate change differently than does an atmospheric scientist or the majority of the scientific community. While both of these examples may involve a minority opinion at odds with common sense, not every case of differences of opinion is so cut and dried. For example, in areas of the Pacific Northwest, continued harvest of threatened species such as salmon or whales is guaranteed to certain Native American tribes by treaty, but these species are threatened or endangered, and protected from harvest in other parts of the region. Clearly, after a dismal history of broken and revoked treaties between the US government and Native American peoples there is little appetite for challenging the perpetual rights to fishing and whaling granted in existing treaties. However, as the threatened fish and whale species continue to decline, some are advocating exactly this course of action. Free Riders: Sometimes, despite all best efforts at creating a fair and equitable system, individuals will chose to ‘cheat the system’, pursuing their own selfish actions even though they know this will cause harm to the larger community. Examples are numerous: urban graffiti and vandalism, tax cheats, bank robbery, insurance scams and, perhaps closer to home, the aggravating problem of the shared workplace refrigerator that is always a terrible mess. While perhaps disappointing from a moral or ethical standpoint, evolutionary theory tells us that the parasitic strategies employed by free riders can be successful, provided the ratio of free riders to those that they parasitize remains low (7). The presence of free riders is dilemma of long standing, as fifth century BC Greek general and historian, Thucydides, tells us: “…they devote a very small fraction of time to the consideration of any public object, most of it to the prosecution of their own objects. Meanwhile each fancies that no harm will come from his neglect, that it is the business of somebody else to look after this or that for him; and so, by the same notion being entertained by all separately, the common cause imperceptibly decays” (8).
Can Scientific Societies Help? The questions of ‘who decides?’ and ‘who polices’ are central to the creation of sustainable systems. Agreement on these issues across international lines is notoriously difficult, even with the existence of trans-governmental bodies such as the United Nations. The frustratingly slow progress of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in addressing the anthropogenic carbon dioxide 71 Levy and Middlecamp; Teaching and Learning about Sustainability ACS Symposium Series; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 2015.
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problem is a recent example that serves to illustrate this point. Extragovernmental organizations are increasingly playing a role in building consensus and effectively driving political change, a case in point being the role of Greenpeace in ending commercial whaling. Heretofore inwardly focused scientific societies may be helpful in constructing a common, scientific evidence-based viewpoint that spans traditional boundaries, helping to inform the general population and drive change at the local, national or international levels. The membership of the American Chemical Society (ACS), the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC), the International Union for Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC), the ACS Division of Organic Chemistry (ORGN) and similar organizations span across a wide range of nations and beliefs, but these members all share a common training in evidence-based inquiry and scientific problem solving. Perhaps these scientific organizations can drive consensus on identifying the most urgent problems and help to focus innovation efforts so as to bring about positive change while promoting education, understanding and training on the emerging science of sustainability. It will be a challenging task for scientific societies to begin playing a larger role in galvanizing public opinion and driving political change. On the other hand, scientific societies have historically shown a commitment to taking charge in building consensus within their own ranks, creating and maintaining the infrastructure of science and showing a commitment to stay and fix rather than abandoning problems to move on to fresh pastures. The scientists committed to these organizations are certainly not free riders, and could be an important element in addressing the sustainability challenge. Success in this effort will depend on several key points: •
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We will need to move quickly and work in concert. Our world is already seriously degraded, and we simply don’t have time to waste in unproductive sidetracks and misaligned approaches to the sustainability problem. We will need to involve a greater proportion of our members, going beyond the rather small percentage of active ‘doers’ who have historically been involved in society matters. Effective strategies for converting free riders to volunteers will be needed to increase the frequency of the volunteer phenotype in the general population. We will need to actively open our society leadership to members with fresh ideas and boundless energy for tackling tough problems. Established leaders will need to provide guidance and council but must resist the temptation to hold onto power past the point where progress toward the ultimate goal becomes slowed. We will need to be bold and courageous to propose and implement global solutions that are capable of addressing the problem at hand, but that are fair and equitable and that preserve the freedom and dignity of the earth’s inhabitants. This is not the time or place for half measures and inaction, or for lopsided strategies that exploit one part of the population for the benefit of another. 72 Levy and Middlecamp; Teaching and Learning about Sustainability ACS Symposium Series; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 2015.
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The Scientific Good Citizen Scientific infrastructure can easily be taken for granted, falling prey to the tragedy of the commons when too many choose to be free riders and too few participate in essential maintenance. The importance of building and maintaining the infrastructure of science was something that was impressed on me during my training as an organic chemist at the University of Illinois. Roger Adams was an important figure at Illinois who was a prolific scientific infrastructure builder, playing an important role in creating the model for the educational and research systems in organic chemistry in the 20th century, including many elements still in play today (9). Adams was also the 1921 chair of the ACS Division of Organic Chemistry, a historical link that I am proud to share with him. The importance of such role models for scientific good citizens cannot be overemphasized, and the expectation that all scientists have an obligation to contribute to the ‘care and feeding’ of scientific infrastructure is an essential civics lesson that deserves more explicit treatment in graduate training programs. Scientific infrastructure-building requires planning and a clear vision of the desired future state. The random walk approach to arriving at the right scientific infrastructure is slow, inefficient and ultimately not a viable path forward for creating a sustainable future.
What Can the ACS Division of Organic Chemistry Do? The mission of the Organic Division is to foster and promote the advancement of the field of organic chemistry. We accomplish this by providing professional development and training, maintaining networks between practicing organic chemists, communicating cutting-edge science in our field, sponsoring awards that help to exemplify excellence in the field and by coordinating excellent programming at ACS National meetings. This outstanding programming is what initially attracted me to the Organic Division, long before I became involved in anything having to do with the running of the division. The division employs a very open process for selecting symposium topics for the national meetings, and consequently the focus of programming varies from year to year, reflecting the changing interests of our members. An open call for symposium proposals can be found on the division website (www.organicdivision.org). The increasing importance of green organic chemistry as a topic of interest to the division provides a nice illustration of how this system works. Only a decade ago we had very little programming on this topic. Initial forays into this at first unfamiliar topic were met with some skepticism, but the popularity of these sessions and the excellence of the science presented therein led to acceptance and growth, to the point where green chemistry topics have become a mainstay of today’s ORGN program. The Organic Division has a number of member-oriented activities that help to support our community and draw our members closer together. The National Organic Symposium is a biannual conclave of organic chemists that has been bringing together organic chemists since 1925. An outstanding overview of the history of this event has been chronicled by Edward Fenlon and division webmaster, Brian Meyers (10). This symposium has played an important 73 Levy and Middlecamp; Teaching and Learning about Sustainability ACS Symposium Series; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 2015.
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historical role in shaping the field or organic chemistry, and will continue to do so for years to come. We have no doubt that organic chemistry will continue to be a vibrant area of scientific investigation well into the future. This division is actively investing in the next generation in terms of education, training and leadership. Longstanding programs sponsored by the division include fellowships for both graduate students and undergraduate researchers as well as symposia honoring outstanding achievement by early career scientists in both academia and industry. When we talk with young students and emerging new organic chemists we find them to be very passionate about using their knowledge to solve global problems and to help build a sustainable future. In an effort spearheaded by John Gupton, the division recently launched an ACS Division of Organic Chemistry Outstanding Undergraduate Chemistry Student in Organic Chemistry Award that recognizes the top organic chemistry student at US universities and colleges. In 2014, 279 different schools participated, and the program continues to grow. The winning students are incredibly enthusiastic about putting their training to work in a career that will make a difference in the world. In a very successful ACS Division of Organic Chemistry Graduate Student Symposium developed by Gary Molander and Andy Evans, rising fifth-year graduate students in organic chemistry are brought together for four days of intensive workshops with student presentations and posters. The program is supported by industry, and helps define a year class among these students. As they go on to finish their studies, some go to careers in industry, others to academia, but it is our hope that they will continue to hang together as a collaborative unit over time. The program is now entering its sixth year, and the passion of these young students for using their knowledge and training to go out and tackle the problems of the world is very impressive and gratifying.
Toward Sustainable Organic Chemistry: Recent Examples David Constable has done a great job of providing a sobering view of the unsustainable situation with regard to accessing many of elements that are routinely used in organic chemistry such as rhodium, indium and palladium (11). Organic chemists are rising to the challenge, replacing a number of these unsustainable metal catalysts with earth-abundant metals such as iron, nickel and cobalt (12–14) or by the use of organocatalysts which contain no metal at all (15, 16). Biocatalysis continues to thrive, being used at increasingly large scale and taking on chemical transformations that were heretofore considered out of scope (17, 18). Other organic chemists are investigating renewable feedstocks (19), solar energy (20), carbon sequestration (21) and conversion of abundant methane to higher molecular weight fuels and feedstocks (22, 23). Still other chemists are taking advantage of recent developments in analytical technologies to push the scale of routine organic synthesis to unprecedented levels of miniaturization (24), or to use sustainable, non-toxic solvents to enable the function of chemical analysis devices that can be brought out of the laboratory and into the everyday world (25). Finally, recent trends in the use of inexpensive remote meeting and 74 Levy and Middlecamp; Teaching and Learning about Sustainability ACS Symposium Series; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 2015.
collaboration technologies may help to both reduce the costs of participation in science, while simultaneously increasing the pool of participants – both important elements for the development of a sustainable global scientific enterprise (26, 27). Excellent reviews of the exciting progress in these and other areas offer ample testimony to the fact that the creativity and ingenuity of organic chemists will play an important role in facilitating the transition to a more sustainable world.
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Please Join the ACS Division of Organic Chemistry I would like to take this opportunity to request that interested readers help the Organic Division to remain an ongoing source for good in our field. Membership is only $15 per year at this writing. The Organic Division, like many ACS divisions, is currently fighting an ongoing decline in membership as the organic chemistry jobs in the US are reduced and as volunteerism continues to decline. Our membership has dropped about twenty-five percent over the past ten years. Many organic chemists know the ACS Division of Organic Chemistry and appreciate the programming, awards and other services that it provides, but are not members. Please, be a scientific good citizen, become involved and take this opportunity to join at the division website (www.organicdivision.org). The Organic Division is committed to fostering and promoting the advancement of the field of organic chemistry to create a sustainable world, and we welcome your involvement in helping us to achieve this mission. We are facing significant challenges, but even the longest journey begins with a single step.
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